Nikki Haley in 2014 Governor's State of the State speeches

Those of us who fought the President's disastrous healthcare plan have watched as predictions of lost coverage, rising costs, and unprecedented dysfunction have come true. ObamaCare is damaging to the country, and it is damaging to South Carolina.

But as a state, and as an elected government, we will not be victims in this process. We rejected the federal government's less than generous offer to run a state exchange, an offer that would have Washington bureaucrats dictating the exchange and
South Carolinians paying for it.

And, with your help, we emphatically said no to the central component of ObamaCare, the expansion of a broken Medicaid program that is already cannibalizing our budget, and would completely destroy it in the years to
come.

These were not decisions made lightly, without thought or analysis. But I am fully convinced that South Carolina will be better for them, and I pledge to you this: we will continue to fight ObamaCare every step of the way.

Source: 2014 South Carolina State of the State Address
Jan 22, 2014

On Local Issues:
South Carolina is the "Beast of the Southeast"

The changes in South Carolina over the last few years are not the result of one person, or one city, or one region. We have realized that what is good for Charleston is good for Greenville, even what is good for Clemson is good for Carolina.

We
have announced over 43,000 new jobs, in 45 out of 46 counties.

We have seen almost $10 billion invested in South Carolina.

We have seen 186 expansions of existing companies, the ultimate compliment a business can give a state.

We've seen the
unemployment rate of our National Guardsmen drop 12 full percentage points, from 16 down to 4.

We have seen companies from 25 foreign countries decide that they want to do business on American soil, right here in South Carolina.

We have seen the
lowest unemployment rate in 5 years--and our rate fell 2/3 faster than the national rate.

We are being referred to, which I love, as the "Beast of the Southeast."

Today, the entire country is looking at South Carolina and all she has to offer.

Source: 2014 South Carolina State of the State Address
Jan 22, 2014

On Technology:
Invest in infrastructure, but no gas tax or any other tax

Infrastructure must remain a priority. We know there's more work to be done. You might ask the question, "How do we pay for it?" And my answer will be, "Not by hiking taxes."

We proved last year that we can invest in our roads and bridges with the
dollars we already have. Raising the gas tax--forcing our people and our businesses to pay more for the simple act of getting around--is not an option for me.

I will veto any bill that reaches my desk that raises taxes on gasoline.

So instead, this
year, as last, our budget writers should take the additional revenue that inevitably appears after our budget is balanced--what I call "the money tree,"--and invest it in our infrastructure. Since 2005, the "money tree" that falls every year has averaged
more than $106 million. According to the Department of Transportation, those dollars, invested the right way, will be worth more than $1.3 billion in additional road and bridge improvements. That is prioritizing. That is our job.

Source: 2014 South Carolina State of the State Address
Jan 22, 2014

On Welfare & Poverty:
Trade welfare check for dignity of paycheck

I often heard the complaint that there were too many dependent on government assistance. There was a belief that some of our fellow South Carolinians were choosing to remain on welfare rather than get a job. I don't believe that.

Previously, with
Washington having its way, we would handle welfare recipients by asking a few simple questions, effectively checking a box, and handing over a check. Easy in, easy out.

But no one improves their lot in life that way. Now we do things differently.
We dig deeper. We ask them about their skills, what they are good at. And then, we find them a job. Yes, it seems like a simple concept, but here's the deal: it works. Since starting this program in 2011, we have moved more than 20,000 South Carolinians
from welfare to work.

We should all be proud of this program. But more than that, we should be proud of those workers, those South Carolinians who traded the false stability of a welfare check for the true dignity of a well-earned paycheck.